Assessing predictors of contraceptive use and demand for family planning services in underserved areas of Punjab province in Pakistan: results of a cross-sectional baseline survey
Azmat et al. Reproductive Health (2015) 12:25
DOI 10.1186/s12978-015-0016-9
RESEARCH
Open Access
Assessing predictors of contraceptive use and
demand for family planning services in
underserved areas of Punjab province in Pakistan:
results of a cross-sectional baseline survey
Syed Khurram Azmat1,3, Moazzam Ali2*, Muhammad Ishaque3, Ghulam Mustafa3, Waqas Hameed3, Omar Farooq Khan3,
Ghazunfer Abbas3, Marleen Temmerman1,2 and Erik Munroe4
Abstract
Background: Although Pakistan was one of the first countries in Asia to launch national family planning programs,
current modern contraceptive use stands at only 26% with a method mix skewed toward short-acting and permanent
methods. As part of a multiyear operational research study, a baseline survey was conducted to understand the
predictors of contraceptive use and demand for family planning services in underserved areas of Punjab province in
Pakistan. This paper presents the baseline survey results; the outcomes of the intervention will be presented in a
separate paper after the study has been completed.
Method: A cross-sectional baseline household survey was conducted with randomly selected 3,998 married women of
reproductive age (MWRA) in the Chakwal, Mianwali, and Bhakkar districts of Punjab. The data were analyzed on SPSS
17.0 using simple descriptive and logistic regression.
Results: Most of the women had low socio-economic status and were younger than 30 years of age. Four-fifths of the
women consulted private sector health facilities for reproductive health services; proximity, availability of services, and
good reputation of the provider were the main predicators for choosing the facilities. Husbands were reported as the
key decision maker regarding health-seeking and family planning uptake. Overall, the current contraceptive use ranged
from 17% to 21% across the districts: condoms and female sterilization were widely used methods. Woman’s age,
husband’s education, wealth quintiles, spousal communication, location of last delivery, and favorable attitude toward
contraception have an association with current contraceptive use. Unmet need for contraception was 40.6%, 36.6%,
and 31.9% in Chakwal, Mianwali, and Bhakkar, respectively. Notably, more than one fifth of the women across the
districts expressed willingness to use quality, affordable long-term family planning services in the future.
Conclusion: The baseline results highlight the need for quality, affordable long-term family planning services close to
women’s homes. Furthermore, targeted community mobilization and behavior change efforts can lead to increased
awareness, acceptability, and use of family planning and birth spacing services.
* Correspondence:
2
Department of Reproductive Health and Research, World Health
Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
© 2015 Azmat et al.; licensee BioMed Central. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and
reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain
Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article,
unless otherwise stated.
Azmat et al. Reproductive Health (2015) 12:25
Background
Family planning (FP) is one of the most “health-promoting”
and cost-effective activities in public health promotion
and has the potential to avert approximately 30% of
maternal and 10% of child deaths [1]. Thus, FP contributes to achieving the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) through healthier birth spacing and by reducing mortality and morbidity associated with pregnancy
[2]. In 1950, Pakistan had a population of 37 million
and was the world’s 13th largest country as measured by
population; however, in 2013, Pakistan had become the
sixth largest country with 191 million people [3]. The
first government-supported family planning program
was started in the 1960s, but over a 50-year period, priorities changed as the program evolved. Failure to effectively manage the fertility rate and rapid population
growth had adverse effects on development indicators
such as education, poverty, and life expectancy, particularly for maternal and child health [4].
In Pakistan, approximately 35% (more than 8 million)
of married women of reproductive age (MWRA) practice some form of family planning, and of them, around
26% (6 million women) use a modern method [5]. Among
modern methods, female sterilization/tubal ligation is the
most common method at around 45% of the modern
method mix, but it is chosen late, often after 31.5 years of
age and usually after four or more children [5]. Second,
short-term methods such as condoms accounted for
around 23% of the method mix, with the remainder divided between the pill, injection, and long-term method
(LTM) for contraception, i.e., an intrauterine contraceptive
device (IUCD): 8%, 7%, and 17%, respectively [5]. A
Pakistani woman does not enjoy autonomy of decision
making regarding her own reproductive health and family
planning needs [6]. Moreover, religious opposition and
misinterpretation of family planning impede the adoption
of contraceptives, even among those who desperately want
to space their children [7].
Pakistan is a signatory to the International Conference
on Population and Development (ICPD). To achieve the
country’s commitment to the global MDGs to lower the
fertility rate, slow the rapid population growth, and decrease maternal, neonatal, and child morbidity and mortality, the government of Pakistan pledged to increase
the contraceptive prevalence rate to 55% by 2015 [8].
However, with the prevailing scenario, it is improbable
that this goal will be achieved, although the government
of Pakistan is still the major FP provider in Pakistan
(47%) while 23% of the need is fulfilled by the private
sector [5]. Importantly, 53% of the LTM is supplied by
the public sector, but their contribution in the modern
contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) is only 2.3% [5].
Thus, concentrated efforts are required to utilize all available channels in the public, private, and nongovernmental
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organization (NGO) sectors to address the low and very
slowly progressing CPR and high unmet need for family
planning in Pakistan since only with public and private
sector collaboration can this challenging goal be achieved.
In the present scenario, franchised health establishments are becoming popular worldwide in attracting reproductive health clients [9]. The Marie Stopes Society
(MSS), a local non-governmental organization, therefore,
originally piloted its own version of social franchise
intervention as Suraj (i.e., in English, Sun, a brand name
provided to the clinics of the trained franchise providers
of MSS) in 2008 to improve the reproductive health of
wome (...truncated)